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What’s the Challenge? Research methodology and scope What is a Profession? Key values, knowledge & skills Problems with present trainings. All Photos: IRIN or RedR. Professionalising the Humanitarian Sector. Little universally recognised qualifications
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What’s the Challenge? • Research methodology and scope • What is a Profession? • Key values, knowledge & skills • Problems with present trainings All Photos: IRIN or RedR
Professionalising the Humanitarian Sector • Little universally recognised qualifications • Diminishing individual professional integrity • Lack of systematic and applied learning • Unsystematic personal accountability • Shallow basis for state and employer trust
Research Methodology • Literature review • Professionalisation • Certification • Humanitarian Aid Quality programmes • Focus groups • Individual interviews • On-Line surveys
What did we find? • Professionalism • Core values, knowledge and skills • Present training opportunities
Why bother? • Life & death service • Humanitarian workers need to be more professional because their actions and decisions affect so many lives, sometimes in very dramatic ways
Why bother? • Values matter • A more professional practice would be more relevant, more effective and more efficient in keeping the human dimension at the centre of its practice
Why bother? • Quality matters • It will improve the quality of people who are applying and securing jobs, which ultimately will improve the humanitarian response.
Criteria for a modern profession • Monopoly on specialised knowledge • Knowledge used in an altruistic fashion • Therefore autonomy to self regulate • Responsibility to expand the Knowledge • Responsive to the users of the profession P 6
Who is a professional humanitarian worker? Nutritionists Accountants Professional Humanitarian Workers Drivers Enumerators Wat/San Public Health Workers Logistics P 12
Professional Feedback System Academia Knowledge repository Formal qualifications Research Primary Clients Receive services Feedback on services The profession Field practice Testing knowledge Self regulation
Professional Competencies Experience Knowledge Skills Values P 7
10% dissenters Too complex Entrench Northern exclusivity Foster a mercenary attitude At heart humanitarianism is an act of political solidarity so a professional model is inappropriate A woman with a child on her back getting her rations at Oromi IDP camp, Kitgum District in northern Uganda. Credit: ManoocherDeghati/IRIN
Why we need certificates • “I first of all want to know, do they have the practical skills, then, do they have the technical skills and lastly, do they have a Masters?” • “After many of the INGOs left, the local staff were left with nothing – no references, no certification, no jobs. How can they prove they worked in the response?”
Individual Professionalism • Certified, guaranteed • Safeguards integrity • Promotes competence • Supports evidence-based learning • Personally accountable to the clients